The ROI of increased investment in regional transit. William Schroeer

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Transcription:

The ROI of increased investment in regional transit William Schroeer 1

Why is transit a priority for the Chambers of Commerce? Today: Transit gets people to work 80% of riders going to work or school US Bank: 50% Ameriprise: 60% 2

Today and tomorrow We need transit to compete for workers 3

Transit makes possible a region that draws workers and jobs Companies are recruiting and targeting the next generation of talented workers, the Generation Y/millennials who increasingly prefer urban lifestyles with mass transit. Urban Land Institute 4 Source: Jeffrey Spivak, Urban Office Momentum, Urban Land, September 14, 2011

A thriving region is a product we are making. Transit is a necessary component. If we put in too little, we ll get a less competitive product. 5

Maps to same scale Source: Bill Rankin, McKinsey team analysis Other regions know this 6

Our competition is far ahead And widening their lead 7 Openings and Const ruct ion St art s Planned for 20 13 January 1st, 2013 Yonah Freemark This year, more than $64.3 billion worth of transit expansion projects will begin construction, continue construction, or enter into service in the United States. It s a huge investment, much of it the product of extensive state and local spending. Source: http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2013/01/01/openings-and-construction-starts-planned-for-2013/ What is evident is that certain cities are investing far more than 7others. Among American cities, Denver, Honolulu, Houston, Los

And are benefitting from their investments Denver: #1 Destination for Millennials Minneapolis: #39 Mayor Hancock: They re coming for transit. 8

Would transit investment be worth it here? Regional Transit System: Return on Investment Assessment 9 www.theitascaproject.com/transit%20roi%20exec%20summ ary%20nov%202012.pdf

Itasca Project What is Itasca? An employer-led civic alliance focused on: Building a thriving economy and quality of life in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul Metropolitan region Reducing and eliminating socioeconomic disparities Who is Itasca? 50-plus cross-sector community leaders from Minneapolis-Saint Paul: Private sector CEOs Public sector leaders: the Governor, the Mayors of Minneapolis and St. Paul, Chair of the Metropolitan Council, the leaders of the University of Minnesota and MnSCU Leaders of major foundations and United Way 10

Itasca asked 3 questions about regional transit investments 1 2 3 A built-out regional transit system would require substantial investment. What would be the return on that investment? Investments can be made more or less quickly. Would accelerating build out change the return on investment? Many communities with developing transit systems experience more growth near transit stations. Would such expectations for growth change the return on investment? 11 11

We compared four scenarios Base case Includes current transit options and assumes outstanding commitments are built out (including Central Corridor) 2030 regional plan Accelerated regional plan Assumes Metropolitan Council 2030 plan is executed, including expansion of bus service at 1% annually, nine arterial BRTs, four completed BRT corridors, and three new LRT lines Accelerates the regional plan from scenario one to a 2023 completion 2030 plan with growth near stations Proposes 2030 plan is built as in scenario one, but reallocates 25% of expected community growth to station areas (i.e., assumes station areas absorb more of future growth. Does not presume new growth) 12 12

Current Regional Transit System 13 13

Regional Transit System 2030 A regional transit system in the Region area includes: 1% per year bus service expansion Addition of nine arterial BRTs Four BRT lines Total of five LRT lines Mode and alignment for each corridor are still being determined Source: The Twin Cities Metropolitan Council's 2030 Transitway Plan, adapted by Chambers of Commerce. 14

We calculated six kinds of direct impacts 1. Vehicle operating costs 2. Travel times and travel reliability 3. Shippers and logistics costs 4. Emissions 5. Safety costs 6. Road pavement conditions We worked with the Metropolitan Council to develop costs for each scenario: capital + operations & maintenance 15 15

The benefits of regional transit far outweigh the costs Scenario 1 2030 Regional Plan Compared to base case scenario 2010 $ Millions Investment $4,361 Total direct impacts Low $6,571 High $10,083 IRR* 7.8 14.8% 2 Accelerated Regional Plan $5,289 $10,762 $16,516 11.2 18.0% 3 2030 Plan with more growth near stations $4,361 $9,082 $13,927 13.0 20.9% Note: Benefits and operating and maintenance costs are calculated for 15-year period 2030-2045 for regional system, 2023-2045 for accelerated system. All are reported in 2010 dollars. *IRR = Internal Rate of Return, the discount rate often used in capital budgeting that makes the net present value of all cash flows from a particular project equal to zero 16

Direct impacts by category 1. Travel time savings and reliability 2. Vehicle operating cost savings 3. Shipper and logistics cost savings 4. Reduction in emissions 5. Safety benefits 6. Pavement maintenance savings TOTAL Compared to base case 2010 $ Millions $4,643 - $11,429 $1,479 - $4,717 $185 - $271 $185 - $395 $53 - $88 $26 - $54 $6,571 - $16,516 Note: Benefits and operating and maintenance costs are calculated for 15-year period 2030-2045 for regional system or 2023-2045 for accelerated scenario. All are reported in 2010 dollars 17

The benefits of regional transit far outweigh the costs Building the 2030 regional plan = $6.6 10.1 billion in direct benefits, on a $4.4 billion investment. Accelerating the system build-out would increase direct benefits: $10.7 16.5 billion on a $5.3 billion investment 2030 regional plan with growth near transit stations would increase return on investment by $2 - $4 billion 18

Transit build-out increases access to jobs Building the regional transit system would put employers within a 30-minute commute of 500,000 more employees. = a 25% increase. 19

Example: SW LRT Transporta on for SW: serves and connects job centers Methodist Hospital 5,200 K-Tel Drive Industrial Park 3,500 East End Hopkins (Cargill, Supervalu) 5,000 Opus Business Park 11,000 Beltline Business Park 6,000 West Calhoun 4,200 Excelsior & Grand Park Nicollet 1,000 Downtown Downtown Minneapolis Minneapolis 147,000 emp.* Golden Triangle Business Park 18,000 Highway 212 Corridor 16,000 Jobs within ½-mile of sta on 20

How should we pay for it? 21

Conclusions Program of Projects Study No major untapped funding sources available No financing techniques that will significantly, buy themselves, improve funding outcomes Cannot build a competitive system with current revenue streams 22

How have Peer Regions done it? 1. All cities defined and developed a specific program of projects. 2. All cities use sales taxes as the primary local funding source. 3. All cities use sales taxes for transit and transitway capital & operations. 4. All cities use FTA New Starts funding 5. Several cities are implementing projects using all non-federal funds. 6. Most of the cities had to raise their sales tax rate to fund a Program of Projects. 7. Only two of the seven cities receive state funding. Peer Regions 23

Governor asked Transportation Finance Advisory Committee for recommendations Charged TFAC with describing three scenarios: Status quo Maintaining current performance Economically competitive / world class 24

Governor s Transportation Finance Advisory Committee While the existing transit system is efficient and cost-effective, it is undersized and needs to expand to make the region's projected economic growth a reality. Regions with robust transit systems work better and are choice destinations for employers and employees. Uncertainty in transit development delays private investment. To remain competitive and attain regional economic goals, the Twin Cities must continue to strengthen its transit system. www.dot.state.mn.us/tfac/ 25

Governor asked Transportation Finance Advisory Committee for recommendations Recommends economically competitive regional transit Requires ~$4.2 billion over 20 years. Recommendations sent to Governor all include ½ cent local sales tax. Reliable May allow reduced state funding Successful in competitor regions 26

Existing Transit System Will Schroeer Director, Infrastructure for Economic Development 612.370.9157 wschroeer@minneapolischamber.org 27